African hospitals adopt SOPHiA AI to advance patient care across the continent

African hospitals adopt SOPHiA AI to advance patient care across the continent

Medical institutions from Morocco, Cameroon and South Africa choose SOPHiA artificial intelligence to advance clinical genomics across Africa.

Sophia Genetics, global leader in Data-Driven Medicine, unveiled today, at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) in Phoenix, the list of African hospitals that have started integrating SOPHiA, the company’s artificial intelligence, into their clinical workflow to advance patients’ care across the continent.

Medical institutions at the forefront of innovation already using SOPHiA in Africa include:

• PharmaProcess in Casablanca, Morocco
• ImmCell in Rabat, Morocco
• The Al Azhar Oncology Center in Rabat, Morocco
• The Riad Biology Center in Rabat, Morocco
• The Oudayas, Medical Analysis Laboratory, Morocco
• The Center for Proteomic & Genomic Research (CPGR) in Cape Town, South Africa
• The Bonassama District Hospital in Douala, Cameroon

African hospitals are adopting SOPHiA to – no matter their experience in genomic testing – get up to speed and analyse genomic data to identify disease-causing mutations in patients’ genomic profiles, and decide on the most effective care. As new users of SOPHiA, they become part of a larger network of 260 hospitals in 46 countries that share clinical insights across patient cases and patient populations, which feeds a knowledge base of biomedical findings to accelerate diagnostics and care.

Speaking about the adoption of SOPHiA in Africa, Jurgi Camblong, Sophia Genetics’ CEO and co-founder, declared: “Since inception, our vision has been to develop innovative technological solutions that analyse patients’ genomic profiles to offer better diagnosis and care to the greatest number of patients, wherever they live. Today, I am very proud that SOPHiA is triggering a technological leapfrog movement in healthcare across Africa.”

The CEO added: “By joining our community, African hospitals are breaking down the technological barriers that prevented African patients from benefiting from the same level of genomic testing than patients from the best medical centres worldwide. This is a story about accessibility, democratisation, empowerment, and hope.”

Among other diseases, SOPHiA will be a key partner for African hospitals in oncology. Breast cancer, for instance, has been described as a “serial killer” on the continent as a lack of relevant diagnostics and personalised care means that 60% of women with breast cancer in Africa die, versus 20% in the US and EU. According to a 2012 global report from the International Prevention Research Institute, an earlier diagnostic of breast cancer could increase life expectancy by 30%. Globally, on the continent, the number of new cases of cancer every year should jump to 1.6 million by 2030. As oncology expertise might be based in different places across the globe, SOPHiA ensures that the knowledge of a specialist in Paris will, for instance, be accessible to save patients in Nairobi.

Speaking about the benefits of using SOPHiA for African patients, Dr Reinhard Hiller from the South African Centre for Proteomic and Genomic Research (CPGR) commented: “In creating a first-of-its-kind Genomic Medicine offering in Africa, using SOPHiA has been beneficial because its analysis are used by a global community of genomic medicine practitioners, allowing us to offer a best-in-class service.”

Professor Hicham Mansour, Geneticist at the University Mohamed 1st Genetic Department – Al Azhar Oncology Center in Morocco, added: “Using SOPHiA allows us to analyse genomic data quickly and with great confidence, to better diagnose and follow up with our patients.”

Jurgi Camblong concluded: “After Europe, Canada, Australia, Russia, and Latin America, the adoption of SOPHiA in Africa is perhaps the strongest evidence that the democratisation of Data-Driven Medicine is changing scale to help the highest number of patients, wherever they live across the globe.”

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